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{{ | {{infobox|name=Middle Atlantic (Âdlantki)|pronounce=[ə̀dlɑn(t)kí]|tu=[[Nother]]|species=[[Race of Nother|demihumans]]|in=[[../Atlanteia/]]<br>[[../Timeline|6th–16th century AD]]|no=[No data]|script=[[../Kirumb alphabet/]]|tree=''[[Indo-European languages|Indo-European]]''<br> ''[[Satem]]''<br> [[../Hadwan languages|Hadwan]]<br> [[../Kirumb/]]<br> '''Middle Atlantic'''<br> [[../Atlantic/]]|morph=Fusional|ms=[No data]|wo=[no data]|creator=[[User:Muke|Muke Tever]] | [[User Talk:Muke|✎]]|date=[no data]}} | ||
Âdlantki | '''Âdlantki''' or '''Middle Atlantic''' is the medieval stage of the [[Atlantic]] language, descended from [[Kirumb]]. | ||
==History== | ==History== |
Latest revision as of 06:58, 26 October 2011
Middle Atlantic (Âdlantki) | |
---|---|
Pronounced: | [ə̀dlɑn(t)kí] |
Timeline and Universe: | Nother |
Species: | demihumans |
Spoken: | Atlanteia 6th–16th century AD |
Total speakers: | [No data] |
Writing system: | Kirumb alphabet |
Genealogy: | Indo-European Satem Hadwan Kirumb Middle Atlantic Atlantic |
Typology | |
Morphological type: | Fusional |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | [No data] |
Basic word order: | [no data] |
Credits | |
Creator: | Muke Tever | ✎ |
Created: | [no data] |
Âdlantki or Middle Atlantic is the medieval stage of the Atlantic language, descended from Kirumb.
History
The history of the language begins with the migration of Kirumb speakers out of Greece starting in the fifth century.
The division between Âdlantki and Atlantic is largely arbitrary, and generally placed at the time of the vowel shift that occurred in the 1500s.
Classification
Âdlantki is a Hadwan language in the Indo-European family. Besides its inherited lexicon, Atlantic derives borrowed vocabulary for acrolectal terms from Ancient Greek.
Derived languages
- Atlantic language
Vocabulary
Main article: Âdlantki Lexicon
Writing system
The Âdlantki alphabet is descended from a variety of the Kirumb alphabet (PDF, 117K). As this is not convenient for computer entry, various transliterations exist, the most common being the Windows-character-set-friendly one used on this page.